The descriptive arts
A few weeks ago I gave a fairly measured review of M. Night's The Village. It wasn't what it could have been, but it wasn't what most movies are. It was somewhere in between, in the lower half of the Shyamalan Canon, in the upper, say, 25% of the rest of mainstream Hollywood.
Sorry I couldn't be more forceful, but he gave me nothing to love or hate with anything approaching zealotry.
That's why I'll never make it as an upstart Indie journalist. I can't fake zealotry, I can't mock worship or loathe something for the sake of readership.
Case in point:
"Is it me, or is this something an aged Rod Serling might have dreamed up while masturbating on crystal meth?" Village Idiot, Small World, by Steve WieckingThe article is funny, self-consciously so. It's crammed with as many obscure pop-culture references as one man could possibly fit into a column, and most of the analogies don't hold up
"William Hurt, who’s apparently chosen to ape William Shatner’s distinguished acting technique (Mr. Hurt, we . . . want your . . . Oscar . . . back)"Hurt sounds nothing like Shatner, he sounds nothing like anyone, neither does anyone else in town. That's the point. In hindsight, what most people complain about as clunky dialogue, I now consider a quiet statement about the nature of the community M. Night has created.
This utopia, like the language the people use, is heavy-handed, artificial and altogether vulnerable, not due to encroachment from without, but from internal collapse.
But I don't want to rehash my review. The point of this is that I'm probably not good enough at the Keith Olbermann school of pop culture journalism to pull off any kind of indie rag writing. Olbermann is a genius, no one tops him--but that doesn't stop every twenty-something in America from trying.
The problem I think is that this new wave have made Trivial Pursuit knowledge a sign of status--an end in itself rather than an added dose of color to the issue of central importance. With this shift of focus, they've also brought a liberal dose of haughtiness. It makes me laugh, probably because I'm also a twenty-something with an intellectual axe to grind. But what does it accomplish aside from establishing a loose pecking order of minutiae-obsessed vainglorious sarcasmbots?
It's also just not that hard. Ahem . . . quiet, I'm creating.
"the whole movie I felt like I was watching something dreamed up by Oscar Wilde on one of his eponymous Opium binges. He could have shat this out, typing with his tongue whilst shooting smack into his eyeball in a carriage on his way to clusterfuck Gilbert and Sullivan and still leave time to recieve the stigmata from Pope Gregory before afternoon tea."God that's edgy. The best thing about this freeform criticism is that you get to ignore grammar, chronology, veracity and tact. Tact is the last thing you want. Tact doesn't sell free papers.
The worst part is that this is encroaching on the mainstream. Some guy on Dennis Miller (who is the smoldering wreckage of his former self) last night gave a stupid free-form rant about something or other--which amounted to nothing really.
So I've realized that not only is the political discourse being systematically stupidified, all discourse everywhere is meeting that fate.
I know this isn't the blog I promised Omni, I got worked up. I'm drafting.
4 Comments:
"That's why I'll never make it as an upstart Indie journalist. I can't fake zealotry, I can't mock worship or loathe something for the sake of readership."
Also from you:
"I mean I specifically listen to the Decemberists because no one else does (except for every friend and aquaintence I have). I read books I think no one else has read just to lord the fact over EVERYONE ... That's the kind of cynicism I eat up with fork and knife and seems to have borne itself out today. I'm just one of the throng of Decemberists fans that look and think and dress the same. I would've been in the same basic position if I'd gotten a finance degree and was making shitloads of money."
I think you can do it (summon zealotry), you just need the right motivation. In "Blogspot matchmaking service: Universal truth-o-meter?" your pointed out that your motivation was superiority and disagreeability (is that a word?). Money is an excellent motivator as well.
Sure, you were exaggerating -- probably not that much -- in that July entry to make your weepy point (I know, I know, pot, kettle, black, etc. I'm not innocent of weepy-point making either), but the fact remains that you can adopt whatever attitude -- or at least write to that effect -- that you need.
You're funny, you're smart, you write well. Whatever tone or attitude is necessary, you'll be able to do it. As you ably demonstrated in this entry, you can write intelligently about content, but you're also able to punch it up with whatever hilarity sells newspapers.
Don't worry about it too much. If you can (unfortunately, that will almost certainly involve some self-motivation) get anyone to look at a review that you work hard on, and some other writing samples, I would be surprised if you couldn't sell your criticism.
--Mike Sheffler
PS: Don't even get me started on "The worst part is that this is encroaching on the mainstream ..." That's a big (and correct) point and I don't have the energy to rant on for a few hundred more words just to agree with you.
Wow Mike, you took the time to look up my contradictory statements, nice work.
Not that contradictions in my beliefs and view of myself is particularly hard to find--I'm riddled with them.
And yes, disagreeability is a word . . . a word I made up. Shakespeare got to, so can I. I think the language needs more new words.
seriously, it's not so much that I didn't think I could cut it. I don't think I want to write that kind of stuff.
But if it got me out of my current job, I'd give toothy blowjobs to prominent Republicans.
Well, I really can't fault you for not wanting to write stuff like that. While it's (that type of stuff) is amusing, it does tend to detract from the purpose of column in the first place. That can get tiring after a while.
--Mike Sheffler
Right, unless that IS the purpose of the column in the first place, which I think it usually is. It definitely was on Dennis Miller.
Least funny show EVER.
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